I was cleaning out my childhood bedroom yesterday and discovered my first handheld gaming system, the Atari Lynx. I plugged it in and, to my surprise, was immediately playing California Games again.
I selected California Gamesâs BMX challenge but had forgotten how to backflip. Oh, yeah, press B. This morning I tried some surfing and my muscle memory for it came back immediately. Bear in mind that the Lynx came out in 1989 and I probably hadnât plugged the thing in since the early 90s.
I was born in the late 70s and had home consoles since the early 80s, but I didnât play much handheld gaming. I have vague memories of having a Game & Watch or something like that, and I recall having a digital watch that had a downhill skiing game.
Before I bought a Game Boy Advance in 2001, however, the only dedicated portable system I had was the Atari Lynx a decade prior. I played it in my bedroom, blasting through a sidescrolling shooter called Gates of Zendocon and trying my best to hit the bird in California Gamesâ hacky sack mode. I only had three games and I played them a lot.
Iâm not very nostalgic for the games I played as a kid and havenât bothered to hold on to many of them. I long ago discarded or traded in most of my older games and forgot Iâd held on to the Lynx. Rediscovering it, I was amused by several of its features:
When not plugged in, the Lynx requires six double-A batteries
It has an on button and an off button.
It has something called a Comlynx port that was for plugging one Lynx into another.
It has a âflipâ option for people who wanted to play the game with the d-pad on the right. You had to hold down the systemâs pause button and âoption 2âł in order to activate it. Youâd rotate the system and then use its second set of A and B buttons for action commands:
I donât have much love for this old thing. It served its purpose then, the purpose of being a way to get my gaming fix when I couldnât get to my Commodore 64 elsewhere in the house. Iâll find a good spot to store it, maybe give it away to a museum if they want it. I donât want to let this bit of gaming history go to waste.
Some time after I got my Lynx, Atari released a slightly smaller version of the unit. It was a laughably big portable. They needed something smaller. After all, whoâd ever lug around a portable gaming machine as big as that?

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